Help ID Please! Wire Money?

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by LostDutchman, Sep 3, 2014.

  1. LostDutchman

    LostDutchman Under Staffed & Overly Motivated Supporter

    Hey guys.

    I'm having a heck of a time getting this one figured out. It reminds me greatly of Russian wire money... but it is bronze. I read that there is some bronze wire money out there... but so far have been unable to identify this coin.

    Any help would be appreciated!

    IMG_6298.JPG IMG_6299.JPG
     
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  3. Dougmeister

    Dougmeister Well-Known Member

    Matt, to you, does the writing look Greek, Roman/Latin, or something else?

    "Novao" is Bosnian for "ister", which can mean "The Danube river. Ister is its old Thracian and Greek name."

    (Probably not, but hey...)

    and of course, if it says "Nova", then Latin for "new". But you probably already knew that.
     
    Last edited: Sep 3, 2014
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  4. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    I believe the top line reads Pulo, a denomination of copper wires, and the second is Moscow. I don't know enough about these to be dangerous.

    While this is not one of them, I like the really crude, ugly coppers of the 'Copper Riot' when the government decided they did not need to put silver in the silver coins. It seems this was a hasty decision. I don't generally collect coins as new as the 1660's but wires don't look offensively modern.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_Riot

    v00560bb2506.jpg
     
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  5. Kasia

    Kasia Got my learning hat on

    Can't really help you i.d. it...perhaps others who are more familiar with Russian stuff could. But it seems it says Pavlo Mockobckoi on this (the first letter is the russian p). I think it strange it has a v in Pavlo instead of a b like it does on Mockobckoi. There wasn't a Pavlo (ruler) in Russia who could have put this out prior to Peter the Great, for this to be a 'real' wire money. Because it seems Peter was the one who abolished actual wire money, and wire money was silver before that. But there was a ruler of Russia named Paul (Pavel, anglicised) a son of Peter, ruling for 5 years from 1796-1801. This is after Peter's reign, so there should be no official wire money from this time, but could this be some sort of copy-cat type put out contemporaneous to this? Or a later piece to imitate the wire money. That might explain why it is in bronze and not silver. But I don't know for sure. Just an idea to toss out.
     
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  6. Dougmeister

    Dougmeister Well-Known Member

    Last edited: Sep 3, 2014
  7. Dougmeister

    Dougmeister Well-Known Member

    Last edited: Sep 3, 2014
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  8. John Anthony

    John Anthony Ultracrepidarian

    Nice sleuthing, Doug, and some very interesting reading on those pages.
     
  9. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    lots of cool coin there i didn't know about. i haven't seen on the the OP before either, with eagle obverse.
     
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  10. LostDutchman

    LostDutchman Under Staffed & Overly Motivated Supporter

    Doug... That is it I think... Thanks!
     
  11. NorthKorea

    NorthKorea Dealer Member is a made up title...

    Now that the coin dilemma is solved... Hister / `Ister... Is that possibly what Nostradamus meant when all the conspiracy theorists assumed he was saying Hitler? He was really talking about the Danube River???
     
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  12. Endeavor

    Endeavor Well-Known Member

    The subject coin has "NOVAO".

    #8 and #9 is just "NOVA"

    The obverse eagle looks to be #9
     
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  13. Siberian Man

    Siberian Man Senior Member

    The first one is an old coin of the Grand Principality of Moscow. Face value: pulo.
     
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  14. Teddydogno1

    Teddydogno1 Well-Known Member

    Got one of these this week, too. Similar, anyway, but silver and likely later issue.

    1699_russia_wire_obv2.jpg 1699_russia_wire_rev.jpg

    Rob
     
  15. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

  16. Teddydogno1

    Teddydogno1 Well-Known Member

    Thanks, Doug! I hadn't stumbled on that web page. Looks like I have part of "Prince", most of "Peter" and a chunk of "Alekseevich" plus some "all" and a start of "Russia".

    Is there another site that shows more of what the other side should look like? I believe I have the most central part, the figure on horseback. My figure looks different from yours, too.

    Rob
     
  17. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    The obverse of the silver kopecks was pretty standard showing a rider with downward spear. Often there is a letter or monogram under the horse and the reverse legends separate out the rulers but rarely are all on flan. Peter's are often worse than most. Your example is better than most. The one of Mikhail Fedorovich below has as much obverse as any I have. I am no expert, own very few and know no really good website.
    v00550bb2604.jpg

    There are other denominations from earlier rulers most commonly the denga (half kopeck) showing a horseman with a sword popular from the reign of Ivan the Terrible.
    v00510bb2601.jpg

    Dies for these were mechanically reproduced so it is common to find what appear to be die duplicates using ancient standards. When I first learned this, I was fearing that such coins were fakes made from copy dies but it is apparently normal for these.
     
  18. xGAJx

    xGAJx Happy

    I thought you wanted is to wire you money for the coin right away... Lol
     
  19. Teddydogno1

    Teddydogno1 Well-Known Member

    Thanks again, Doug.

    And my apologies to you, Matt, if this was "threadjacking". My intent was to enhance the thread as well as get info for myself.

    Rob
     
  20. LostDutchman

    LostDutchman Under Staffed & Overly Motivated Supporter

    No problem! It was definitely an informative threadjacking.
     
  21. Lord Geoff

    Lord Geoff Active Member

    Yes he was referring to the Hister (Ister) river and so people jumped all over that "similarity".

    James Randi wrote an entire book ripping the Nostradamus thing to shreds, if you want a good read.
     
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